Discrimination, Religious Coping, and Tobacco Use Among White, African American, and Mexican American Vocational School Students |
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Authors: | Karissa D. Horton Alexandra Loukas |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Kinesiology and Health Education, The University of Texas at Austin, 1 University Station, D3700, Austin, TX, 78712, USA
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Abstract: | This study examined whether religious coping moderates the impact of racial/ethnic discrimination on current (past 30 day) cigarette and cigar/cigarillo use among a racially/ethnically diverse sample of 984 technical/vocational school students (47.1% women; mean age = 25 years). Results indicate that discrimination increased the likelihood of current cigarette use among African American students and current cigar/cigarillo use among white and African American students. Positive religious coping decreased the likelihood of cigarette and cigar/cigarillo smoking for white students only. Negative religious coping increased the likelihood of cigarette use for white students and cigar/cigarillo use for white and African American students. Two 2-way interactions indicate that positive and negative religious coping moderate the discrimination–cigarette smoking relationship for African American and Mexican American students, respectively. |
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